Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 25.djvu/87

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490, 505). An ordinance was passed on 3 March 1647 for paying him 1,448l. in satisfaction of his arrears (ib. v. 477). At the sale of bishops' lands in 1647 and 1648 Harvey purchased for 7,617l. 2s. 10d. the manor of Fulham, Middlesex, other land in Fulham for 674l. 10s., and a fee farm rent out of the manors of Burton and Holnest, Dorsetshire (Nichols, Collectanea, i. 3, 123, 127). He also bought from the Nourse family of Woodeaton, Oxfordshire, the lease of the great tithes of the see of London, and resided at the episcopal palace at Fulham. On being nominated one of the commissioners to try the king he attended regularly; but on the last day (27 Jan. 1649) he expressed his dissatisfaction with the proceedings, and refused to sign the warrant. Soon afterwards he was made first commissioner of customs and a navy commissioner. In the beginning of November 1655 Harvey sumptuously entertained Cromwell at Fulham (Mercurius Politicus, November 1655, p. 5740), but on the 7th of that month was ordered to the Tower for joining with three other commissioners of customs in defrauding the Commonwealth, and he was subsequently dismissed from his office. In January 1656 his wife Judith obtained permission for him to reside at Fulham for a month, on his giving security for 10,000l. (Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1655–6, pp. 8, 55, 92). On his promising to refund the money fraudulently acquired he was discharged from custody in the following February (ib. Dom. 1655–6, pp. 169, 352–3, 1656–7, passim). At the Restoration, though he surrendered himself, he was excepted both as to life and property; on 16 Oct. 1660 was brought to trial at the Old Bailey, and was sentenced to death, but was ordered on 31 Oct. 1661 to be confined in Pendennis Castle, Cornwall (ib. Dom. 1661–2, pp. 130, 134).

[Commons' Journals, vols. ii. iii. iv. v. viii.; Coxe's Cat. Cod. MSS. Bibl. Bodl., pars v. fasc. ii. 735; Noble's English Regicides, i. 337–45; Trial of Regicides in State Trials (Cobbett and Howell); Faulkner's Fulham, 1813, p. 159.]

HARVEY, EDMUND GEORGE (1828–1884), author and musical composer, was born on 20 Feb. 1828 at Penzance. His father, William Woodis Harvey (1798–1864), born at Penzance on 15 June 1798, was educated at Queens' College, Cambridge (B.A. 1828, M.A. 1835); was vicar of Truro from 1839 to 1860, and a prebendary of Exeter; died at Torquay on 6 Oct. 1864; and published, besides numerous sermons: 1. ‘The Tucknet Split,’ 1824 (under the pseudonym of ‘Pindar’). 2. ‘Sketches of Hayti,’ London, 1827, 8vo. He also edited some of John Wesley's minor works. Edmund George, the eldest son, graduated B.A. at Queens' College, Cambridge, 1850. He afterwards resided for a few years on the continent, and made a ‘pair-oar expedition’ through France, Prussia, &c., which he described in ‘Our Cruise in the Undine.’ He was ordained in 1854, becoming in 1859 curate at St. Mary's, Truro, and in 1860 rector of this, the family living. In 1865 he was transferred to the vicarage of Mullyon or Mullion, Cornwall. Harvey was much interested in church music. He died on 21 June 1884, aged 56, and was buried at Truro.

Harvey published, besides sermons and parochial addresses: 1. ‘Our Cruise in the Undine,’ 1854, 8vo. 2. ‘Short Services for Daily Use in Families,’ 1856; 2nd edition, 1864, 12mo. 3. ‘Psalmody, Gregorian Tones,’ &c., Truro, 1858, 12mo. 4. ‘A Form of Pointing the Canticles to the use of the Anglican Chant,’ Truro, 1859, 12mo (printed for the Cornwall Association of Church Choirs, of which the author was an honorary secretary). 5. ‘Gregorian Chants and Anglican;’ a leaflet, Hayle, 1872, 8vo. 6. ‘Mullyon; its History, Scenery, and Antiquities,’ &c., Truro, 1875, 4to. ‘Truro, Concise History of Ancient Church and City,’ with illustrations, was announced in 1878, but never published. Harvey's musical publications include: ‘La Rosaura,’ polka, 1846; ‘When Death is drawing near,’ 1853; ‘Undinen,’ waltzes, Bruges, 1853; ‘S. Matthias,’ ‘S. Malo,’ and ‘S. Lucian,’ hymn-tunes, Truro, 1859–62; ‘O Lord, my God,’ Weston-super-Mare, 1864; ‘The Signal Gun,’ German melody harmonised, Weston-super-Mare, 1864; ‘Our Children's Matin Hymn,’ London, 1864; ‘Our Children's Evensong,’ London, 1864, 12mo; ‘The Wortle Te Deum’ for parish choirs, London, 1865, 12mo; ‘Strawberry Leaves,’ old Cornish song harmonised, Mullyon, 1867; ‘A Litany of the Holy Name,’ Mullyon, 1870; ‘The Truro Use,’ edited by Harvey, Truro, 1877.

[Boase and Courtney's Bibliotheca Cornubiensis, i. 211–12, 213–14, ii. 861, iii. 1219, 1220; Gent. Mag. 1864, pt. ii. p. 662; Academy, xxvi. 9; Clergy Lists, 1855–65.]

HARVEY, Sir EDWARD (1783–1865), admiral, third son of Captain John Harvey [q. v.], and younger brother of Admiral Sir John Harvey [q. v.], was with his father as a first-class volunteer on board the Brunswick in the battle of 1 June 1794; afterwards with his brother John in the Prince of Wales; in the Beaulieu frigate he was present at the battle of Camperdown; and was again with his brother in the Southampton and Amphitrite. In July 1801 he was made a lieute-